Healthcare workers walk outside NYU Langone Medical Center on 1st Avenue in Manhattan after people came to cheer and thank them, during the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in New York City, April 20, 2020.Brendan McDermid/Reuters
The legacy of the coronavirus pandemic, if written today, would be the unspeakable tragedy of hundreds of thousands of dead worldwide, major cities under lockdown, millions suddenly out of work, the largest economic stimulus package in US history, and the heroic sacrifices of health care workers.
And it would be impossible to tell this story without discussing the ways in which President Donald Trump left the US utterly unprepared. As coronavirus spread across China and into other countries, Trump ignored myriad warnings of an impending public health and economic catastrophe. He spent weeks downplaying the threat, assuring Americans he had everything under control even as his administration struggled to develop effective tests needed to diagnose and treat the infected.
The US is now the epicenter of the pandemic. There will be more to the story than the sheer number of people killed by the virus, the economic catastrophe it induced, and Trump's bungled handling of the pandemic.
All historic crises have byproducts that ripple through time. Some are predictable, some are utterly unexpected. Celebrations surrounding the end of World War I exacerbated the Spanish flu pandemic in the US. World War II would lead to the mass production of penicillin, the first antibiotic. The Great Recession fostered enhanced financial protections for Americans. The 9/11 terror attacks catalyzed the longest war in US history.
This pandemic will also change society in irrevocable ways.
With nearly over 45,000 already dead in the US and millions unemployed in a matter of weeks, the crisis is pushing Americans to embrace new perspectives about the safeguards the country should have in place — including universal health care — in case something of this magnitude strikes again.
And as New Yorkers gather at their windows each night at 7 pm to cheer for frontline health care workers, it's also possible this crisis — as depressing and draining as it's been — will inspire a new generation of doctors, nurses, and scientists.
The pandemic is exposing many of America's flaws, particularly the dangers of hubris and the toxicity of the movement against science. It's raising questions about the status of the US as a global power.
And there are rising concerns that public health tracking by the government will cause constitutional debates down the line. Much like the 9/11 terror attacks, coronavirus has sparked a new debate regarding the tradeoffs between liberty and security.
At the moment, it's impossible to know where this crisis will lead. The US does not yet have a robust system of testing in place for the virus, meaning the country lacks a full picture of the scale of the outbreak within its borders. But we can gain perspective on where this road might take us, and maybe even find hope, by examining the ways America changed in earlier crises.
Read the original article on Business InsiderThe Great Recession was the worst economic disaster the US faced since the Great Depression. It crippled an entire generation financially, saw businesses shutter, and pushed people out of their homes. The causes continue to be debated, and the detrimental impact of the crisis continues to be felt by many Americans. The Obama administration instituted policies that put the US on the road to recovery, but coronavirus threatens much of that progress.
Consequences of the 2008 financial crisis:
Joseph Zeballos-Roig and Andy Kiersz contributed reporting.
The 9/11 terror attacks sent shockwaves through the US and the wider world. They catalyzed a global war on terror, which continues despite mounting evidence it's been a costly failure. Though the attacks themselves unified Americans in an inspiring way in the days that immediately followed, they also led the US government to take actions many feel violated the purported values of the country.
Consequences of the 9/11 terror attacks:
The Vietnam War was a byproduct of the colonial era and the Cold War. The US entered the war to prevent Vietnam from becoming a communist nation. It failed, and the war stood as a major embarrassment for the US on the global stage. Domestically, the war contributed to anti-government fervor and unrest amid the Civil Rights Movement and the counterculture movement. The war was a knock to US confidence, and changed the way the country looked at itself. Meanwhile, much of the world looked at the US as an imperialist bully.
Consequences of the Vietnam War:
The US and Soviet Union emerged from the horrors and devastating of World War II as the most powerful countries in the world. Though they'd been allies in the fight against the Axis, the two superpowers would go on to spend the next half century competing for influence in every corner of the world. It was not a hot war, as they never engaged one another directly, hence this epic battle for hegemony was dubbed the "Cold War."
The consequences of the Cold War:
Though World War I was supposed to be the "war to end all wars," another global conflict began roughly 20 years after it ended with Germany's invasion of Poland in 1939. The US, still reeling from the Great Depression, was wary of getting involved. But after it was attacked by the Japanese Empire at Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, that quickly changed. World War II transformed the US into one of the world's most powerful nations, while fostering massive advances in technology and changes in the international system.
The consequences of World War II:
The Great Depression was the worst economic calamity in the history of the modern world, beginning with the stock market crash in October 1929. It was a devastating era that pushed many Americans into poverty and shook the confidence of the nation. The US did not fully emerge from it until World War II, which mobilized the country in unprecedented ways and morphed it into a superpower.
The consequences of the Great Depression:
In the final year of World War I, the deadliest pandemic in history — the Spanish flu of 1918 — killed more people that the conflict itself. The US, distracted by the war, was hit hard. Many American cities issued strict guidelines, including banning gatherings and ordering people to wear masks, that helped quell the spread. Cities that didn't take the flu seriously were especially devastated by the 1918 pandemic.
The consequences of the 1918 Spanish flu:
The US entered World War I in 1917, years after fighting erupted in Europe, and held off on getting involved until public sentiment began to shift after the sinking of the Lusitania passenger ship by a German U-boat and the infamous Zimmerman Telegram. But the bloody conflict still scarred a generation of Americans, and set the stage for World War II to occur barely two decades later.
The consequences of World War I:
The Civil War continues to stand as the bloodiest conflict in US history. The conflict nearly destroyed the nation, and continues to incite divisions in the present day. Southern states seceded amid a national debate over slavery, in an effort to perpetuate the enslavement of their fellow humans and in rebellion of the federal government. The South (the Confederacy) ultimately lost to the Union.
The consequences of the Civil War:
The Revolutionary War led to the establishment of a country that would grow to become the most powerful, wealthy nation on the planet in the course of roughly 160 years. The Continental Army defeated the world's greatest empire at the time, sending shivers down the spines of monarchs across Europe.
The consequences of the American Revolution: